ECONOMICS 40223

International Monetary Economics

Study Questions for Semester (Fall 2016)

INSTRUCTIONS: You will find below study questions designed to guide your studying. A subset of these exact questions will appear on your exams. You are under no obligation to complete them but there is, not surprisingly, a high correlation between doing these and earning a high grade! Please bear the following in mind:

General issues

$The exams are weighted such that a perfect score on all the questions from the list below earns you at least a low B. A’s are reserved for those who also answer the “hell” questions correctly. That said, data from previous classes show that there is a high correlation between doing well on the non-hell portion of exams and scoring highly on the hell portions.

$I am also happy to check over your answers to make sure they are correct. Just send a copy to . Please see below for the dates by which I’ll need to receive your answers.

$You are free to reword any lecture or reading question however you like. However, always be sure to send it to me on your study question list so that you can be sure that I agree it includes all the important information–don’t wait until the exam to find out!

$If I check your study questions and accidentally approve an incorrect answer that you then give on an exam, you get full credit. If I initially subtract points, just let me know and I’ll fix it. That’s the John Harvey Guarantee!

$If you are resending questions to me, please let me know which ones are new and/or adjusted from last time so I don’t have to check the entire list all over again.

$Studying involves taking this list and a blank piece of paper and writing out the answers until, according to your list of answers, you don’t make any mistakes. THERE IS SIMPLY NO SUBSTITUTE FOR DOING THIS!

Reading questions

$The place where the study questions are the most helpful is on the readings (I write the lecture answers on the board). As a rule, I don’t go over these in class and the study question list prevents you from having to guess which parts of “The Blessings of Free Trade” I expect you to remember for the exam. I tell you up front!

$Be sure to actually read the articles and not simply harvest them for the study question answers. If you do the latter, you won’t really understand the context and you’ll end up having to memorize. There’s too much material to do that. Those who use someone else’s study question answers face the same problem. I don’t actually want you to just know what’s on the list, I hope you learn much more than that. However, I’m only going to test you over the list.

Using someone else’s answers

$There is no rule against this. The study questions are not an assignment.

$If you and a friend (or enemy or bystander) worked on the questions together, please let me know when you send the questions to me so that I can be sure you both get the John Harvey Guarantee.

$If you did not work together but choose to use someone else’s already-corrected study questions, please do not send them to me unedited. In other words, if I indicated on their answers that they needed to make adjustments, make these first. In addition, let me know which ones have been adjusted so I don’t have to check the entire list all over again. If you already know they are perfect, please don’t send them at all. Just email me saying, “I’m using Victor Boschini’s study question answers!” and then you’ll get the John Harvey Guarantee based on their answers. (FYI, he’s never take this course so you should probably use someone else’s. That was just an example.)

$If you choose to use someone else’s study questions from a previous semester, all of the above apply plus one more: please see if the questions are the same as in the previous semester (I add and subtract whole questions and change the wording on others). If this hasn’t been done, I’ll return the questions unchecked. And I will wish terrible things on you and your family.

Study question organization

$Questions are grouped by their source. For examples, questions based on lecture material have Lecture before them, and then appear without spaces between them. For questions where answers can be found in the reading, the specific link is given and the questions are then grouped without spaces.

$Green questions may also appear on the final exam.

Study question deadlines

$Anyone wanting their exam one study questions checked must have submitted them to me by midnight, Sunday, September 18.

$Anyone wanting their exam two study questions checked must have submitted them to me by midnight, Friday, October 28.

$Anyone wanting their final exam study questions checked must have submitted them to me by midnight, Sunday, December 11.

$Deadlines apply whether you take that exam at the regular time or not

$I do not recheck the green questions on the final exam list since they were subject to one of the two earlier deadlines.

BACKGROUND

Lecture

  1. Distinguish between validity and cogency. [25 words]
  2. List the balance of payments accounts. [29 words]
  3. What is a floating or flexible exchange rate system. [13 words]

The Basics of Foreign Trade and Exchange

  1. What may be necessary before you buy foreign goods or services, or to invest in other countries? [14 words]
  2. What are the three main centers of trading, which handle the majority of all FX transactions? [3 countries]
  3. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, what are the four types of foreign exchange market participants? Please describe each in a sentence. [81 words]
  4. What are the three reasons participants in the FX market trade? [35 words]

Wikipedia: Foreign Exchange Market

  1. List and explain the five financial instruments available in the foreign exchange market (skip exchange traded fund). [117 words]

Wikipedia: Fixed Exchange Rate

  1. What is a fixed or pegged exchange rate? [35 words]
  2. Generally speaking, what does maintaining a fixed exchange rate entail? What, for example, might a government have to do if a rate drifts too far below the desired rate? [56 words]

Harvey: Post Keynesian Macroeconomics and the Financial Crisis

  1. In what sense to banks hold a critical position in the production process? [14 words]
  2. By uncertainty, Keynes meant what about bankers and entrepreneurs? [24 words]
  3. Why would any one in their right mind put down money at a game where they had no idea of the odds and what, at any given moment, determines whether or not US corporations are opening new facilities or laying off workers? [20 words]
  4. What is THE driver of economic activity and what is the unintended consequence of firms deciding they don’t want to do it any more (using the car factory as an example)? [32 words]
  5. Briefly tell why a firm cares about its stock price after the initial sale (two reasons). [22 words]
  6. Draw the schematic that shows how the stock market should affect economic growth. Which link may be broken if agents do not do a great deal of research before buying shares? [14 words]
  7. In the stock market, why won’t “smart” money necessarily drive out the others and what does this mean there simply is no mechanism to do? [62 words]
  8. The domination of the stock market by psychological factors leads to what? What sports analogy is used to explain the negative impact of this (explain it rather than just referencing it)? [79 words]
  9. Hyman Minsky theorized what about economic agents and what did he say everyone would inevitably do? [64 words]
  10. In terms of when recessions start, at some point, someone somewhere say what? How can this evolve into a full-blown crisis and what may make us more susceptible? [44 words]
  11. What is financialization, what two groups encouraged it and how, what have its two consequences been, and to what did both lead? [you can leave out the “contributed to” and “encouraged by” stuff; 103 words]

EXCHANGE RATE DETERMINATION: POST KEYNESIAN

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter One

  1. In the first few pages, what does Harvey appear to be arguing will be the key element of the Post Keynesian view in terms of what drives exchange rates? [37 words]
  2. What three things does the Institutionalist influence on the book mean for foreign exchange (hint: organization, a priori assumption, and market behavior)? [120 words; three things]

Lecture

  1. In the Neoclassical or Mainstream model, what maintains the equality of investment and saving and at the same time guarantees full employment? [95 words plus graph]
  2. In Keynes' model, what maintains the equality of investment and saving and allows for less-than-full employment equilibrium? [bunch of math plus explanation]

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter Three

Reading

  1. Briefly contrast the Neoclassical and Post Keynesian views of expectations (in terms of causation). [68 words]

Foreign Currency Market Structure

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter Three

  1. Which level of foreign currency activity essentially creates the demand for currency (while the other two accommodate)? Explain. [26 words]
  2. Those wholesaling face a complex world. How do they make their money? What makes this easier said than done? [85 words]

Exchange Rates and Trade Imbalances

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter Four

  1. In what way does the exchange rate play a role similar to that outlined for interest rates (from the Neoclassical perspective) in chapter one? [48 words]

Lecture

  1. Be able to manipulate the exchange rate graph (be sure you can label the actual exchange rate, the balanced-trade exchange rate, imports, exports, capital inflows, capital outflows, the trade balance, and the capital account balance). [whatever!]

FYI, Chapter 4 in the book, “Leakages, injections, exchange rates, and trade (im)balances,” explains these graphs in detail.

Open Economy Z-D Diagram

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter Five

  1. Why is the D curve sloped as it is? [35 words]
  2. What determines the intercept of the D curve? [8 words]
  3. The Z curve is simply what written in what space (you don’t need the equation)? [22 words]
  4. Why does the Z curve get steeper? Be sure to explain in terms of sales and the payroll as well as marginal returns. [55 words]

**********probably to about here for exam one**********

Harvey: The International Monetary System and Exchange Rate Determination: 1945 to the Present

  1. By what have exchange rates been marked and why is this problematic (be sure to cover the consequences fo the second issue completely)? [35 words]
  2. The fixed-exchange rate system Bretton Woods collapsed in the early 1970s, but the spectacular growth of the capital market really began when? [4 words]
  3. What did Keynes believe regarding capital flows with respect to defending parities? How long did he believe such policies should be in place? [31 words]
  4. Who did Keynes think should be allowed to convert currency and what arrangement was actually adopted? [17 words]
  5. How did the attempt to control capital flows by balkanizing the market backfire? [you’ll have to work on this one a bit–it’s there, but you have to draw it out; 26 words]
  6. Please list the policy (2), exogenous (3), and endogenous (2) factors that have contributed to the growth of the capital market since the collapse of Bretton Woods. [34 words]

Quinn and Harvey: Speculation and the Dollar in the 1980s

  1. What are institutionalist economists drawn to ask when studying economic phenomena and what do you think that must mean? [38 words]
  2. What is the Neoclassical argument that justifies the operation of an unregulated asset market? [78 words]
  3. What did Keynes and Veblen argue with respect to unregulated asset markets (not physical investment; note that what they have to say is slightly different)? [63 words]
  4. What sort of pattern has US exchange rate policy followed since WWII (the US would go back and forth between these two states)? [9 words]
  5. What did the dollar do in the early 1980s and what was the reaction of the government? Who forced a change in attitude the mid-1980s and what did the US do thereafter? [38 words]
  6. What core concepts did Neoclassical economics begin to test given the apparent irrationality of the dollar’s fluctuations in the 1980s? [5 words]

Open Economy Z-D Diagram

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter Five

  1. What are the conclusions drawn from the equations used to derive the BTFX curve and how do they affect the latter’s slope? [73 words]
  2. What must be true when BTFX is flatter? [20 words]
  3. Because we have a fractional-reserve banking system, money is created how? [28 words]
  4. Explain how the demand for money can be broken into two distinct parts. [equation plus 55 words]
  5. On the FXM curve, what forces are assumed to be driving net capital inflows (show by equation)? [equation]

Lecture

The following three answers are available at:

Because of the above links I don’t check these on study question lists.

  1. Show the effect of a rise in investment or a fiscal stimulus on the open economy Z-D diagram. [graph plus schematic]
  2. Show the effect of a rise in interest rates on the Post Keynesian open economy Z-D diagram. [graph plus schematic]
  3. Show the effect of a fall in the expected value of the dollar in the Post Keynesian open economy Z-D diagram. [graph plus schematic]

Expectations and Decision Making

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter Three

  1. On what currency price does today’s expectation of the future impact? [9 words]
  2. List and explain the five stages of decision making. [81 words]
  3. List and explain the three heuristics (not the biases). [126 words without examples]
  4. What are the forecast-construction biases introduced by the three heuristics? [62 words]
  5. Explain why people prefer to follow conventional wisdom. [chart with a brief statement regarding which row is preferred and why]
  6. List and explain Keynes’ five observations regarding the workings of asset markets (uncertainty, low confidence, convention, quick results, and animal spirits). [301 words]
  7. Explain how volatility is created by uncertainty, availability, representativeness, anchoring, the desire for quick results, animal spirits, and convention. What stops it? [200 words]
  8. Explain how bandwagons are created by availability, anchoring, representativeness, increasing confidence /forecast substantiation, and credit/blame issues. [162 words]

Keynes: Chapter Twelve, General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money

  1. What is the “outstanding fact” Keynes discusses early in the chapter?
  2. Keynes suddenly shifts from talking about physical investment to portfolio investment. How does he justify his belief that the “daily revaluations of the Stock Exchange, though they are primarily made to facilitate transfers of old investments between one individual and another, inevitably exert a decisive influence on the rate of current investment?” [25 words]
  3. What does Keynes think could be accomplished by his half sarcastic, half serious, suggestion that we should make the purchase of an investment permanent and indissoluble, like marriage, except by reason of death or other grave cause? [17 words]
  4. What does Keynes mean by animal spirits? [8 words]
  5. In terms of animal spirits/spontaneous optimism, what does Keynes say about slumps and depressions and prosperity? [58 words]
  6. Is Keynes arguing that everything depends on waves of irrational psychology? Explain. [99 words]

The Mental Model

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter Three

  1. What is the “mental model?” [72 words]

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter Five

  1. Explain the concept of medium-term expectations, including how they affect the significance of events. [97 words]
  2. Why are agents not as capricious as they could be in deciding what is important in exchange rate determination and what does their worldview recognize? [49 words]

**********probably to about here for exam two**********

  1. What are the “indicators” on the Mental Model diagram? [22 words]
  2. What four Mental Model variables have historically been most important to agents (please list in order)? [6 words]

Lecture

  1. Draw the complete Mental Model diagram as shown in the reading, but you may omit “desire to cash in FX” and “forecast confidence.” [schematic]

Financial Crises

Currencies, Capital Flows, and Crises: Chapter Five